SINGAPORE —October 1, 2009 —
"NVIDIA and the Fermi team have taken a giant step towards making GPUs attractive for a broader class of programs," said Dave Patterson, director Parallel Computing Research Laboratory, U.C. Berkeley and co-author of
Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach. "I believe history will record Fermi as a significant milestone."
Presented at the company’s inaugural GPU Technology Conference, in San Jose, California, "Fermi" delivers a feature set that accelerates performance on a wider array of computational applications than ever before. Joining NVIDIA’s press conference was Oak Ridge National Laboratory who announced plans for a new supercomputer that will use NVIDIA® GPUs based on the "Fermi" architecture. "Fermi" has also garnered the support of leading organisations including Bloomberg, Cray, Dell, HP, IBM and Microsoft. "It is completely clear that GPUs are now general purpose parallel computing processors with amazing graphics, and not just graphics chips anymore," said Jen-Hsun Huang, co-founder and CEO of NVIDIA. "The Fermi architecture, the integrated tools, libraries and engines are the direct results of the insights we have gained from working with thousands of CUDA developers around the world. We will look back in the coming years and see that Fermi started the new GPU industry." As the foundation for NVIDIA’s family of next generation GPUs namely GeForce
®, Quadro® and Tesla® ? "Fermi" features a host of new technologies that are "must-have" features for the computing space, including:
- ® fluid and rigid body solvers)
- Nexus – the world’s first fully integrated heterogeneous computing application development environment within Microsoft Visual Studio
Images, technical whitepapers, presentations, videos, and more on "Fermi" can all be found at
www.nvidia.com/fermi
About NVIDIA
NVIDIA (Nasdaq: NVDA) awakened the world to the power of computer graphics when it invented the graphics processing unit (GPU) in 1999. Since then, it has consistently set new standards in visual computing with breathtaking, interactive graphics available on devices ranging from portable media players to notebooks to workstations. NVIDIA’s expertise in programmable GPUs has led to breakthroughs in parallel processing which make supercomputing inexpensive and widely accessible.
Fortune magazine has ranked NVIDIA #1 in innovation in the semiconductor industry for two years in a row. For more information, see www.nvidia.com.
NVIDIA Corp. today introduced its next generation CUDA™ GPU architecture, codenamed "Fermi". An entirely new ground-up design, the "Fermi"™ architecture is the foundation for the world’s first computational graphics processing units (GPUs), delivering breakthroughs in both graphics and GPU computing.
